BTW, my second favorite quote from the Zuckerberg interview is Zuckerberg’s response to Tim O’Reilly’s question about the importance of building the right cultural DNA is to Facebook. Here’s what he says:

We have these values that we write down, and there are 5 of them that we write down. The two I’d focus on right now that I really try to hammer home every day are “move fast” and “be bold and take risks”.

Technology companies … just tend to get slower, and then they get replaced by smaller companies that are more versatile. So one of the things that I think about every day is how can we make this company operate as quickly as possible. And often that’s encouraging people to move quickly, but a lot of it’s about building really good infrastructure that enables people to move quickly on top of solid abstractions that we built. And that’s a real big deal I think.

As a Business/Enterprise Architect, I really appreciate the value of “solid abstractions” to a flexible, agile, performatn business operating platform. Working for a traditional media company, I think this appreciation and focus can sometimes be lacking. I think it’s understood in some general way be senior management, but I think senior executive of traditional media companies have a long way to go to appreciate the role of Architecture in contributing to business operational agility.

This post is a compilation of various links around News Media, Advertising, and Technology that were of interest to me as I reviewed the year past, and look forward to 2011. Sorry if the links seem a bit arbitrary – many were “filling in the gaps” of my current view of the world. Hopefully you find something of interest, if only the taxonomy :) .

A couple days ago I blogged about Alexander Osterwalder‘s fantastic new book Business Model Generation. I’m about half way through the book, just beginning the section on Ideation, the second technique introduced in the Design part of the book … when the words on the page just stopped me dead in my tracks, in as much as they struck right to the heart of the matter. Here’s the passage:

Mapping an existing business model is one thing, designing a new and innovative business model is another. What’s needed is a creative process for generating a large number of business model ideas and successfully isolating the best ones. This process is called ideation.

Wait, here’s the punchline …

Business model innovation is not about looking back, because the past indicates little about what is possible in terms of future business models. Business model innovation is not about looking to competitors, since business model innovation is not about copying or benchmarking, but about creating new mechanisms to create value and derive revenues. Rather, business model innovation is about challenging orthodoxies to design original models that meet unsatisfied, new, or hidden customer demands.

Business Model Generation – Introduction

Introduction

So I recently came across a book on Amazon that immediately piqued my interest. That book is Business Model Generation, by Alexander Osterwalder. This is one of the most unique and interesting books and approaches I’ve come across in a long while. Here’s the front cover of the book:

Business Model Generation is a recent addition to the long line of books on business model innovation in the face of disruptive business change. Geoffrey Moore, Clayton Christensen, Michael Porter, the Balanced Scorecard and Strategy Maps, and others are part of this long tradition. But this book is very special IMO. And the primary reason for its uniqueness is its use of visual thinking.

Basic Premise of the Book

There are several important premises that underlie this book, IMO (Edit Aug 2/10: Having nearly finished reading the book, I would definitely now update this list. In fact, I will be updating this entire blog post. Will do that over the next day or two.). They are:

The scale and speed with which innovative business models are transforming industrial landscapes today is unprecedented

Designing new business models is extremely difficult

It is important to be able to describe and communicate a business model in clear, concise, and simple way – and this best way to do this is through visual thinking and communication

Having a formal method, and a common vocabulary, to describe, collaboratively design, and communicate business models is critical

Structured, visual models are an important link in bridging strategy and execution

That’s it I think. Those are really the key premises underlying the book. Note that this is just a list I put together, and you won’t find this list specifically in the book. But I think it’s pretty close to the mark.

Business Model Canvas

The Business Model Canvas is the core framework presented in the book for describing and generating new business models. This framework is illustrated in the picture below from the book.

It’s a bit hard to see without clicking on the above picture to enlarge it, but Business Model Canvas has 9 key inter-locking pieces – or building blocks – that, taken together, can describe any business model. These 9 building blocks are:

The value proposition of what is offered to the market

The segment(s) of clients that are addressed by the value proposition

The communication and distribution channels to reach clients and offer them the value proposition

The relationships established with clients

The key resources needed to make the business model possible

The key activities necessary to implement the business model

The key partners and their motivations to participate in the business model

The revenue streams generated by the business model (constituting the revenue model)

The cost structure resulting from the business model

The book covers each of these pieces in some detail. But these “pieces” are not just a list of isolated components. They come together in an inter-locking framework that is illustrated below.

For design geeks out there, here’s a highly interesting and entertaining view of the structure and design of the book – focusing on the Business Model Canvas section – by the book’s Creative Director Alan Smith:

For Smith’s commentary on the design of the Business Model Patterns section, click here.

Working with the Business Model Canvas

When using the Business Model Canvas in a collaborative setting, participants typically work on a wall poster that is organized as shown below:

But the gold in the Business Model Canvas comes from the collaborative discussions and explorations in trying to envision new business models. Typically as mentioned above, participants will work with a wall-sized version of the post, and use post-it notes to flesh out either an existing business model, or possibilities for a new business model. Here’s a simplified version of a possible business model in the solar industry:

In the ideation phase, this process will be messy, messy. Much messier, for instance, than this highly-simplified model of the Financial Times business model:

And that’s a good thing. :)

Using Visual Thinking techniques to illustrate Business Models

Example – Sellaband

Using Post-it notes is a quick and easy way to throw out ideas, and be able to easily and quick move them around on a canvas. However, as Osterwalder discusses in the Design section of his book, Visual Thinking and pictures can convey meaning and relationships in a way that text simply can’t.

As an example, here’s a sketch that JAM did for a young Dutch company Sellaband, that was looking to envision a completely new business model in the music industry – a platform enabling crowd-funding of independent music artists:

Of course, there are numerous subtleties in this diagram that would have been addressed in ideation process, which would require significant elaboration. But that’s the point of the diagram, to simplify the business model to a single picture, that provides a high-level overview of its most fundamental elements.

Additionally, Sellaband created the visual to develop a shared understanding, and to pitch their business model to potential investors. So they would be in a position to elaborate on the visuals in face-to-face meetings.

Telling the Story

The book advises that a powerful way to explain a business model is to tell the story “one image at a time”. It cautions:

Presenting a full description within the Business Model Canvas can overwhelm an audience. It’s better to introduce the model piece by piece … It allows the audience to follow the build-up of the model, and the visuals complement your explanation.

The book describes the 4 steps in telling a visual story as:

Map your business model

Draw each business model element

Define the storyline

Tell the story

The value of Visual Thinking

Osterwalder elaborates on the value of visual thinking in working with business models:

Visual thinking is indispensable to working with business models. … Because business models are complex concepts composed of various building blocks and their interrelationships, it is difficult to truly understand a model without sketching it out.

A business model really is a system where one element influences the other; it only makes sense as a whole. Capturing that big picture without visualizing it is difficult. In fact, by visually depicting a business model, one turns its tacit assumptions into explicit information.

In summary, visual thinking brings a clarity and coherence to the complex set of elements and relationships inherent in a business model in a way that textual description simply can’t.

Hearing it straight from the Horses mouth …

All well and fine, but it’s always nice to hear someone speak about their approach in person. Probably the best video of Osterwalder presenting his approach is the video below:

The slide deck accompanying this presentation can be found here. Here’s another presentation Osterwalder gave on Business Model Innovation in Melbourne in 2008, with the accompanying slides available here.